RFC 878: ARPANET 1822L Host Access Protocol (original) (raw)

Request for Comments: 878 Obsoletes RFCs: 851, 802

              The ARPANET 1822L Host Access Protocol

                              RFC 878

                          Andrew G. Malis
                   ARPANET Mail: malis@bbn-unix

                     BBN Communications Corp.
                          50 Moulton St.
                       Cambridge, MA  02238

                           December 1983

 This RFC specifies the ARPANET 1822L Host Access Protocol,  which
 is  a successor to the existing 1822 Host Access Protocol.  1822L
 allows ARPANET hosts to use  logical  names  as  well  as  1822's
 physical port locations to address each other.


 1822L Host Access Protocol                          December 1983
 RFC 878

                         Table of Contents

 1   INTRODUCTION.......................................... 1

 2   THE ARPANET 1822L HOST ACCESS PROTOCOL................ 3
 2.1   Addresses and Names................................. 5
 2.2   Name Translations................................... 7
 2.2.1   Authorization and Effectiveness................... 7
 2.2.2   Translation Policies............................. 11
 2.2.3   Reporting Destination Host Downs................. 13
 2.2.4   1822L and 1822 Interoperability.................. 15
 2.3   Uncontrolled Packets............................... 16
 2.4   Establishing Host-IMP Communications............... 19
 2.5   Counting RFNMs When Using 1822L.................... 20
 2.6   1822L Name Server.................................. 23

 3   1822L LEADER FORMATS................................. 25
 3.1   Host-to-IMP 1822L Leader Format.................... 26
 3.2   IMP-to-Host 1822L Leader Format.................... 34

 4   REFERENCES........................................... 42

 A   1822L-IP ADDRESS MAPPINGS............................ 43

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                              FIGURES

 2.1  1822 Address Format.................................. 5
 2.2  1822L Name Format.................................... 6
 2.3  1822L Address Format................................. 6
 3.1  Host-to-IMP 1822L Leader Format..................... 27
 3.2  NDM Message Format.................................. 30
 3.3  IMP-to-Host 1822L Leader Format..................... 35
 3.4  Name Server Reply Format............................ 38
 A.1  1822 Class A Mapping................................ 44
 A.2  1822L Class A Mapping............................... 44
 A.3  1822L Class B Mapping............................... 45
 A.4  1822L Class C Mapping............................... 46

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 1822L Host Access Protocol                          December 1983
 RFC 878

 1  INTRODUCTION

 This RFC specifies the ARPANET 1822L Host Access Protocol,  which

 will allow hosts to use logical addressing (i.e., host names that

 are independent of their physical location  on  the  ARPANET)  to

 communicate  with  each  other.  This new host access protocol is

 known as the ARPANET 1822L (for Logical)  Host  Access  Protocol,

 and  is  a  successor  to  the  current  ARPANET 1822 Host Access

 Protocol, which is described in  sections  3.3  and  3.4  of  BBN

 Report  1822  [1].   Although  the  1822L protocol uses different

 Host-IMP leaders than the 1822 protocol, the IMPs  will  continue

 to support the 1822 protocol, and hosts using either protocol can

 readily communicate with each other (the  IMPs  will  handle  the

 translation automatically).

 The RFC's terminology is consistent  with  that  used  in  Report

 1822, and any new terms will be defined when they are first used.

 Familiarity  with  Report  1822  (section  3  in  particular)  is

 assumed.   As could be expected, the RFC makes many references to

 Report 1822.  As a result, it uses, as a convenient abbreviation,

 "see 1822(x)" instead of "please refer to Report 1822, section x,

 for further details".

 This RFC updates, and obsoletes, RFC 851.  The changes from  that

 RFC are:

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 o Section 2.2.4 was rewritten for clarity.

 o Section 2.5 was expanded to  further  discuss  the  effects  of

   using 1822L names on host-to-host virtual circuits.

 o In section 3.2, the type 1  IMP-to-host  message  has  two  new

   subtypes,  the type 9 message has one new subtype, and the type

   15, subtype 4 message is no longer defined.

 o An appendix describing the  mapping  between  1822L  names  and

   internet (IP) addresses has been added.

 All of these changes to RFC 851 are marked by revision  bars  (as  |

 shown here) in the right margin.                                   |

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 2  THE ARPANET 1822L HOST ACCESS PROTOCOL

 The ARPANET 1822L Host Access  Protocol  allows  a  host  to  use

 logical  addressing  to  communicate  with  other  hosts  on  the

 ARPANET.  Basically, logical addressing allows hosts to refer  to

 each  other  using  an  1822L  name  (see  section  2.1) which is

 independent of a host's physical location in  the  network.   IEN

 183  (also  published  as  BBN  Report 4473) [2] gives the use of

 logical  addressing  considerable   justification.    Among   the

 advantages it cites are:

 o The ability to refer to each host on  the  network  by  a  name

   independent of its location on the network.

 o Allowing different hosts to share  the  same  host  port  on  a

   time-division basis.

 o Allowing a host to use multi-homing (where a single  host  uses

   more than one port to communicate with the network).

 o Allowing several hosts that provide the same service  to  share

   the same name.

 The main differences between the 1822 and 1822L protocols are the

 format of the leaders that are used to introduce messages between

 a host and an IMP, and the specification in those leaders of  the

 source  and/or  destination  host(s).   Hosts  have the choice of

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 using the 1822 or the 1822L protocol.  When a host comes up on an

 IMP,  it  declares  itself to be an 1822 host or an 1822L host by

 the type of NOP message (see section  3.1)  it  uses.   Once  up,

 hosts  can  switch  from  one protocol to the other by issuing an

 appropriate NOP.  Hosts that do not use the 1822L  protocol  will

 still  be  addressable by and can communicate with hosts that do,

 and vice-versa.

 Another difference between the two protocols  is  that  the  1822

 leaders are symmetric, while the 1822L leaders are not.  The term

 symmetric means that in the 1822 protocol, the exact same  leader

 format  is used for messages in both directions between the hosts

 and IMPs.  For example, a leader sent from a host  over  a  cable

 that  was  looped  back onto itself (via a looping plug or faulty

 hardware) would arrive back at the host and appear to be a  legal

 message  from  a  real host (the destination host of the original

 message).  In contrast, the 1822L headers are not symmetric,  and

 a  host  can  detect  if  the  connection to its IMP is looped by

 receiving a message with the wrong leader  format.   This  allows

 the host to take appropriate action upon detection of the loop.

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 2.1  Addresses and Names

 The 1822 protocol defines one form of host specification, and the

 1822L  protocol  defines  two additional ways to identify network

 hosts.  These three forms are 1822 addresses,  1822L  names,  and

 1822L addresses.

 1822 addresses are  the  24-bit  host  addresses  found  in  1822

 leaders.  They have the following format:

        1              8 9                              24
       +----------------+---------------------------------+
       |                |                                 |
       |  Host number   |           IMP number            |
       |                |                                 |
       +----------------+---------------------------------+

                        1822 Address Format
                            Figure 2.1

 These fields are quite large, and the ARPANET will never use more

 than  a  fraction of the available address space.  1822 addresses

 are used in 1822 leaders only.

 1822L names are 16-bit unsigned numbers that serve as  a  logical

 identifier  for  one  or  more  hosts.   1822L  names have a much

 simpler format:

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                 1                             16
                +--------------------------------+
                |                                |
                |           1822L name           |
                |                                |
                +--------------------------------+

                         1822L Name Format
                            Figure 2.2

 The 1822L names are just 16-bit  unsigned  numbers,  except  that

 bits  1  and  2 are not both zeros (see below).  This allows over

 49,000 hosts to be specified.

 1822 addresses cannot be used in 1822L leaders, but there may  be

 a  requirement for an 1822L host to be able to address a specific

 physical host port or IMP fake host.  1822L  addresses  are  used

 for  this  function.   1822L addresses form a subset of the 1822L

 name space, and have both bits 1 and 2 off.

                1   2  3          8 9             16
              +---+---+------------+----------------+
              |   |   |            |                |
              | 0 | 0 |   host #   |   IMP number   |
              |   |   |            |                |
              +---+---+------------+----------------+

                       1822L Address Format
                            Figure 2.3

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 This format allows 1822L hosts to directly address hosts 0-63  at

 IMPs  1-255  (IMP  0 does not exist).  Note that the highest host

 numbers are reserved  for  addressing  the  IMP's  internal  fake

 hosts.   At  this  writing, the IMP has seven fake hosts, so host

 numbers 57-63 address the IMP fake hosts, while host numbers 0-56

 address  real  hosts  external  to the IMP.  As the number of IMP

 fake hosts changes, this boundary point will also change.

 2.2  Name Translations

 There are a number of factors that determine how an 1822L name is

 translated  by  the  IMP  into a physical address on the network.

 These factors include which translations are legal; in what order

 different  translations  for  the  same name should be attempted;

 which  legal  translations  shouldn't  be  attempted  because   a

 particular  host  port  is down; and the interoperability between

 1822  and  1822L  hosts.   These  issues  are  discussed  in  the

 following sections.

 2.2.1  Authorization and Effectiveness

 Every host on a C/30 IMP, regardless of whether it is  using  the

 1822  or  1822L  protocol  to access the network, can have one or

 more 1822L names (logical addresses).  Hosts using 1822L can then

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 use  these  names to address the hosts in the network independent

 of their  physical  locations.   Because  of  the  implementation

 constraints mentioned in the introduction, hosts on non-C/30 IMPs

 cannot be assigned 1822L names.  To circumvent this  restriction,

 however,  1822L  hosts can also use 1822L addresses to access all

 of the other hosts.

 At this point, several questions  arise:   How  are  these  names

 assigned,  how  do  they  become  known  to  the  IMPs  (so  that

 translations to physical addresses can be made), and how  do  the

 IMPs know which host is currently using a shared port?  To answer

 each question in order:

 Names are assigned by a central network administrator.  When each

 name  is  created, it is assigned to a host (or a group of hosts)

 at one or more specific host ports.  The host(s) are  allowed  to

 reside at those specific host ports, and nowhere else.  If a host

 moves, it will keep the same name, but the administrator  has  to

 update  the  central  database  to  reflect  the  new  host port.

 Changes to this database are  distributed  to  the  IMPs  by  the

 Network  Operations  Center  (NOC).  For a while, the host may be

 allowed to reside at either of (or both) the new and  old  ports.

 Once  the  correspondence  between  a  name and one or more hosts

 ports where it  may  be  used  has  been  made  official  by  the

 administrator,   that  name  is  said  to  be  authorized.  1822L

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 addresses, which actually  refer  to  physical  host  ports,  are

 always authorized in this sense.

 Once a host has been assigned one or more names, it  has  to  let

 the  IMPs  know  where it is and what name(s) it is using.  There

 are two cases to consider, one for 1822L hosts  and  another  for

 1822  hosts.   The following discussion only pertains to hosts on

 C/30 IMPs.

 When an IMP sees an 1822L host come up on a host  port,  the  IMP

 has  no way of knowing which host has just come up (several hosts

 may share the same port, or one host may prefer to  be  known  by

 different  names  at different times).  This requires the host to

 declare itself to the IMP before it can actually send and receive

 messages.   This  function  is  performed  by  a  new host-to-IMP

 message, the Name Declaration  Message  (NDM),  which  lists  the

 names  that  the  host would like to be known by.  The IMP checks

 its tables to see if each of the names is authorized,  and  sends

 an  NDM  Reply  to  the  host  saying  which  names were actually

 authorized and can now be used for sending and receiving messages

 (i.e.,  which  names  are  effective). A host can also use an NDM

 message to change its list of effective names (it can add to  and

 delete  from  the  list) at any time.  The only constraint on the

 host is that any names it wishes to use can become effective only

 if they are authorized.

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 In the second case, if a host comes up on a C/30  IMP  using  the

 1822 protocol, the IMP automatically makes the first name the IMP

 finds in its tables  for  that  host  become  effective  when  it

 receives the first 1822 NOP from the host.  Thus, even though the

 host is using the 1822 protocol, it can  still  receive  messages

 from  1822L  hosts  via  its  1822L name.  Of course, it can also

 receive messages from an 1822L host  via  its  1822L  address  as

 well.    (Remember,  the  distinction  between  1822L  names  and

 addresses is that the addresses correspond to physical  locations

 on   the   network,   while   the   names  are  strictly  logical

 identifiers).  The IMPs translate between the  different  leaders

 and send the proper leader in each case (see section 2.2.4).

 The third question above has by now already been answered.   When

 an  1822L  host comes up, it uses the NDM message to tell the IMP

 which host it is (which names it is known by).  Even if this is a

 shared port, the IMP knows which host is currently connected.

 Whenever a host goes down, its names  automatically  become  non-

 effective.   When it comes back up, it has to make them effective

 again.

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 2.2.2  Translation Policies

 Several hosts can share the same 1822L name.  If more than one of

 these  hosts  is  up  at the same time, any messages sent to that

 1822L name will be delivered to just one  of  the  hosts  sharing

 that  name,  and  a RFNM will be returned as usual.  However, the

 sending host will  not  receive  any  indication  of  which  host

 received  the  message,  and subsequent messages to that name are

 not guaranteed to be sent to the  same  host.   Typically,  hosts

 providing  exactly  the  same  service could share the same 1822L

 name in this manner.

 Similarly, when a host is multi-homed, the same  1822L  name  may

 refer  to  more  than  one  host  port (all connected to the same

 host).  If the host is up on only one of those ports,  that  port

 will be used for all messages addressed to the host.  However, if

 the host were up on more than one  port,  the  message  would  be

 delivered  over  just  one  of  those ports, and the subnet would

 choose which port to use.  This port selection could change  from

 message  to  message.   If  a  host wanted to insure that certain

 messages were delivered to it on specific ports,  these  messages

 could  use  either  the  port's 1822L address or a specific 1822L

 name that referred to that port alone.

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 1822L Host Access Protocol                          December 1983
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 Three different address selection policies are available for  the

 name mapping process.  When translated, each name uses one of the

 three policies  (the  policy  is  pre-determined  on  a  per-name

 basis).  The three policies are:

 o  Attempt each translation in the order in  which  the  physical

    addresses  are listed in the IMP's translation tables, to find

    the first reachable  physical  host  address.   This  list  is

    always  searched  from the top whenever an uncontrolled packet

    is to be sent or a new virtual circuit connection  has  to  be

    created  (see  section  2.5).   This is the most commonly used

    policy.

 o  Selection of the closest  physical  address,  which  uses  the

    IMP's   routing   tables   to  find  the  translation  to  the

    destination  IMP  with  the  least  delay  path  whenever   an

    uncontrolled  packet  is  to  be sent or a new virtual circuit

    connection has to be created.

 o  Use load leveling. This is similar to the second  policy,  but

    differs  in  that  searching  the  address  list  for  a valid

    translation starts at the address following where the previous

    translation search ended whenever an uncontrolled packet is to

    be sent or a new virtual circuit connection has to be created.

    This  attempts to spread out the load from any one IMP's hosts

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    to the various host ports associated with a  particular  name.

    Note  that this is NOT network-wide load leveling, which would

    require a distributed algorithm and tables.

 2.2.3  Reporting Destination Host Downs

 As was explained in report 1822, and  as  will  be  discussed  in

 greater detail in section 2.5, whenever regular messages are sent

 by a host, the IMP opens a virtual  circuit  connection  to  each

 destination  host  from  the source host.  A connection will stay

 open at least as long as there are  any  outstanding  (un-RFNMed)

 messages  using it and both the source and destination hosts stay

 up.

 However, the destination host may go down for some reason  during

 the  lifetime of a connection.  If the host goes down while there

 are no outstanding messages  to  it  in  the  network,  then  the

 connection  is  closed  and  no  other  action is taken until the

 source host submits the next message for  that  destination.   At

 that time, ONE of the following events will occur:

 A1.  If 1822 or an 1822L address is being  used  to  specify  the

      destination host, then the source host will receive a type 7

      (Destination Host Dead) message from the IMP.

 A2.  If an 1822L name is being used to  specify  the  destination

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      host,  and  the  name maps to only one authorized host port,

      then a type 7 message will also be sent to the source host.

 A3.  If an 1822L name is being used to  specify  the  destination

      host,  and  the  name  maps to more than one authorized host

      port, then the IMP attempts to open a connection to  another

      authorized  and  effective  host  port for that name.  If no

      such connection can be made, the host will receive a type 15

      (1822L  Name  or  Address  Error),  subtype  5 (no effective

      translations) message (see section 3.2).  Note that a type 7

      message  cannot be returned to the source host, since type 7

      messages refer to a particular destination  host  port,  and

      the name maps to more than one destination port.

 Things get a bit more complicated if there  are  any  outstanding

 messages  on  the connection when the destination host goes down.

 The connection will be closed, and  one  of  the  following  will

 occur:

 B1.  If 1822 or an 1822L address is being  used  to  specify  the

      destination host, then the source host will receive a type 7

      message for each outstanding message.

 B2.  If an 1822L name is being used to  specify  the  destination

      host, then the source host will receive a type 9 (Incomplete  |

      Transmission), subtype 6  (message  lost  due  to  logically  |

      addressed  host  going  down)  message  for each outstanding  |

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 1822L Host Access Protocol                          December 1983
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      message.  The next time  the  source  host  submits  another

      message   for  that  same  destination  name,  the  previous

      algorithm will be used (either step A2 or step A3).

 The above two algorithms also apply when a  host  stays  up,  but

 declares  the  destination  name for an existing connection to no

 longer be effective.  In this case, however, the type 7  messages

 above will be replaced by type 15, subtype 3 (name not effective)

 messages.

 Section 2.3 discusses how destination host downs are handled  for

 uncontrolled packets.

 2.2.4  1822L and 1822 Interoperability

 As  has  been  previously  stated,  1822  and  1822L  hosts   can

 intercommunicate,  and  the  IMPs  will  automatically handle any

 necessary leader and address format  conversions.   However,  not

 every   combination   of   1822   and  1822L  hosts  allows  full

 interoperability with regard to the use  of  1822L  names,  since

 1822 hosts are restricted to using physical addresses.

 There are two possible situations where any incompatibility could  |

 arise:                                                             |

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 1822L Host Access Protocol                          December 1983
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 o  An 1822 host sending a message to an  1822L  host:   The  1822  |

    host  specifies the destination host by its 1822 address.  The  |

    destination host will receive the message with an 1822L leader  |

    containing  the  1822L addresses of the source and destination  |

    hosts.                                                          |

 o  An 1822L host sending a message to an 1822  host:   The  1822L  |

    host  can  use  1822L  names  or addresses to specify both the  |

    source and  destination  hosts.   The  destination  host  will  |

    receive  the  message  with an 1822 leader containing the 1822  |

    address of the source host.                                     |

 2.3  Uncontrolled Packets

 Uncontrolled packets (see 1822(3.6)) present a unique problem for

 the  1822L protocol.  Uncontrolled packets use none of the normal

 ordering and error-control mechanisms in the IMP, and do not  use

 the  normal  virtual circuit connection facilities.  As a result,

 uncontrolled packets need to carry all  of  their  overhead  with

 them, including source and destination names.  If 1822L names are

 used when sending an uncontrolled packet, additional  information

 is  now required by the subnetwork when the packet is transferred

 to the destination IMP.  This means that less  host-to-host  data

 can  be  contained  in  the  packet than is possible between 1822

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 hosts.

 Uncontrolled packets that are sent between 1822 hosts may contain

 not  more  than  991 bits of data.  Uncontrolled packets that are

 sent to and/or from 1822L hosts are limited to 32 bits  less,  or

 not  more  than  959  bits.  Packets that exceed this length will

 result in an error indication to the host, and  the  packet  will

 not  be sent.  This error indication represents an enhancement to

 the previous level of service provided by the  IMP,  which  would

 simply   discard  an  overly  long  uncontrolled  packet  without

 notification.

 Other enhancements that  are  provided  for  uncontrolled  packet

 service  are  a  notification  to the host of any errors that are

 detected by the host's IMP when it receives the packet.   A  host

 will  be  notified if an uncontrolled packet contains an error in

 the 1822L  name  specification,  such  as  if  the  name  is  not

 authorized or effective, if the remote host is unreachable (which

 is indicated by none of its names being  effective),  if  network

 congestion control throttled the packet before it left the source

 IMP, or for any other reason the source IMP was not able to  send

 the packet on its way.

 In most cases, the host will not be notified if the  uncontrolled

 packet  was  lost  once  it  was  transmitted  by the source IMP.

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 However, the IMP will attempt to notify  the  source  host  if  a

 logically-addressed  uncontrolled packet was mistakenly sent to a

 host that the source IMP thought was effective, but which  turned

 out  to  be  dead  or non-effective at the destination IMP.  This

 non-delivery notice  is  sent  back  to  the  source  IMP  as  an

 uncontrolled  packet from the destination IMP, so the source host

 is not guaranteed to receive this indication.

 If the source IMP successfully receives the non-delivery  notice,

 then  the  source  host  will  receive  a  type 15 (1822L Name or

 Address Error), subtype 6 (down or non-effective  port)  message.

 If  the  packet  is  resubmitted or another packet is sent to the

 same destination name,  and  there  are  no  available  effective

 translations,  then  the  source  host  will  receive  a type 15,

 subtype 5 (no effective translations) message if the  destination

 name  has  more than one mapping; or will receive either a type 7

 (Destination Host Dead)  or  a  type  15,  subtype  3  (name  not

 effective)   message   if  the  destination  name  has  a  single

 translation.

 Those enhancements to the uncontrolled packet  service  that  are

 not  specific  to  logical  addressing will be available to hosts

 using 1822 as well as 1822L.  However, uncontrolled packets  must

 be  sent  using  1822L leaders in order to receive any indication

 that the packet was lost once it has left the source IMP.

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 2.4  Establishing Host-IMP Communications

 When a host comes up on an IMP, or after there has been  a  break

 in   the  communications  between  the  host  and  its  IMP  (see

 1822(3.2)), the orderly flow of messages between the host and the

 IMP  needs  to  be properly (re)established.  This allows the IMP

 and host to recover from most any failure  in  the  other  or  in

 their communications path, including a break in mid-message.

 The first messages that a host should send to its IMP  are  three

 NOP  messages.   Three  messages  are  required to insure that at

 least one message will be properly read by the IMP (the first NOP

 could be concatenated to a previous message if communications had

 been broken in mid-stream, and the third provides redundancy  for

 the   second).    These   NOPs   serve  several  functions:  they

 synchronize the IMP with the host, they tell  the  IMP  how  much

 padding  the  host  requires  between  the message leader and its

 body, and they also tell the IMP whether the host will  be  using

 1822 or 1822L leaders.

 Similarly, the IMP will send three  NOPs  to  the  host  when  it

 detects  that  the host has come up.  Actually, the IMP will send

 six NOPs, alternating three 1822  NOPs  with  three  1822L  NOPs.

 Thus, the host will see three NOPs no matter which protocol it is

 using.   The  NOPs  will  be  followed  by  two  Interface  Reset

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 messages,  one of each style.  If the IMP receives a NOP from the

 host while the above sequence is occurring,  the  IMP  will  only

 send  the  remainder  of  the NOPs and the Interface Reset in the

 proper style.  The 1822 NOPs will contain the 1822 address of the

 host interface, and the 1822L NOPs will contain the corresponding

 1822L address.

 Once the IMP  and  the  host  have  sent  each  other  the  above

 messages, regular communications can commence.  See 1822(3.2) for

 further details concerning the ready line,  host  tardiness,  and

 other issues.

 2.5  Counting RFNMs When Using 1822L

 When a host submits a regular message using an 1822  leader,  the

 IMP  checks  for  an  existing simplex virtual circuit connection

 (see 1822(3.1)) from the source host to the destination host.  If

 such  a  connection already exists, it is used.  Otherwise, a new

 connection from the source host port to the destination host port

 is  opened.   In either case, there may be at most eight messages

 outstanding on that connection  at  any  one  time.   If  a  host

 submits  a  ninth message on that connection before it receives a

 reply for the first message, then the host will be blocked  until

 the reply is sent for the first message.

                              - 20 -


 1822L Host Access Protocol                          December 1983
 RFC 878

 Such connections can stay open for some time, but are  timed  out

 after  three minutes of no activity, or can be closed if there is

 contention for the connection blocks  in  either  the  source  or

 destination  IMP.   However, a connection will never be closed as

 long as there are any outstanding messages on it.  This allows  a

 source  host  to  count the number of replies it has received for

 messages to each destination host address in order to avoid being

 blocked   by  submitting  a  ninth  outstanding  message  on  any

 connection.

 When a host submits a regular message using an  1822L  leader,  a

 similar process occurs, except that in this case, connections are

 distinguished by the  source  port/source  name/destination  name

 combination.   When  the message is received from a host, the IMP

 first looks for an open connection for that same port and  source

 name/destination  name pair.  If such a connection is found, then

 it is used, and no further name translation  is  performed.   If,

 however,  no open connection was found, then the destination name

 is translated, and a connection opened to the physical host port.

 As  long  as there are any outstanding messages on the connection

 it will stay open, and it will have  the  same  restriction  that

 only  eight messages may be outstanding at any one time.  Thus, a

 source host can still count replies to avoid being  blocked,  but

 they must be counted on a source port and source name/destination

                              - 21 -


 1822L Host Access Protocol                          December 1983
 RFC 878

 name pair basis, instead of just by source port  and  destination

 host address as before.

 Since connections are based on the source name  as  well  as  the

 destination  name,  this  implies that there may be more than one

 open connection from physical host port A to physical  host  port

 B,   which   would   allow   more  than  8  outstanding  messages

 simultaneously from the first to the second port.   However,  for

 this  to  occur, either the source or destination names, or both,

 must differ from one connection to the next.  For example, if the

 names  "543"  and  "677" both translate to physical port 3 on IMP

 51, then the host on that port could  open  four  connections  to

 itself  by  sending  messages  from "543" to "543", from "543" to

 "677", from "677" to "543", and from "677" to "677".

 As has already been stated,  the  destination  names  in  regular

 messages  are  only translated when connections are first opened.

 Once a connection is open, that connection, and  its  destination

 physical  host port, will continue to be used until it is closed.

 If, in the meantime, a "better" destination host  port  belonging

 to  the  same  destination name became available, it would not be

 used until the next time a  new  connection  is  opened  to  that

 destination name.

                              - 22 -


 1822L Host Access Protocol                          December 1983
 RFC 878

 Also, the act of making an 1822L name be non-effective  will  not  |

 automatically cause any connections using that name to be closed.  |

 However, they will be closed  after  at  most  three  minutes  of  |

 inactivity.  A host can, if it wishes, make all of its names at a  |

 port be noneffective and close all of its connections to and from  |

 the port by flapping the host's ready line to that IMP port.       |

 2.6  1822L Name Server

 There may  be  times  when  a  host  wants  to  perform  its  own

 translations,  or  might need the full list of physical addresses

 to which a particular name maps.  For example, a connection-based

 host-to-host  protocol  may  require  that the same physical host

 port on a multi-homed host be used for all  messages  using  that

 host-to-host  connection, and the host does not wish to trust the

 IMP to always deliver messages using a destination  name  to  the

 same host port.

 In these cases, the host  can  submit  a  type  11  (Name  Server

 Request)  message to the IMP, which requests the IMP to translate

 the destination 1822L name and return a list of the addresses  to

 which  it maps.  The IMP will respond with a type 11 (Name Server

 Reply) message, which contains the selection policy  in  use  for

 that  name,  the  number of addresses to which the name maps, the

                              - 23 -


 1822L Host Access Protocol                          December 1983
 RFC 878

 addresses  themselves,  and  for  each  address,  whether  it  is

 effective and its routing distance from the IMP.  See section 3.2

 for a complete description of the message's contents.

 Using this information, the source host could  make  an  informed

 decision  on which of the physical host ports corresponding to an

 1822L name to use and then send the messages to that port, rather

 than to the name.

 The IMP also supports a different type of name service.   A  host

 needs  to issue a Name Declaration Message to the IMP in order to

 make its names effective, but it may not wish to keep  its  names

 in  some table or file in the host.  In this case, it can ask the

 IMP to tell it which names it is authorized to use.

 In this case, the host submits a  type  12  (Port  List  Request)

 message to the IMP, and the IMP replies with a type 12 (Port List

 Reply) message.  It contains, for the host port  over  which  the

 IMP  received the request and sent the reply, the number of names

 that map to the port, the list of names, and whether or not  each

 name  is  effective.   The  host can then use this information in

 order  to  issue  the  Name  Declaration  Message.   Section  3.2

 contains a complete description of the reply's contents.

                              - 24 -


 1822L Host Access Protocol                          December 1983
 RFC 878

 3  1822L LEADER FORMATS

 The following sections describe the formats of the  leaders  that

 precede  messages  between  an 1822L host and its IMP.  They were

 designed to be as compatible with the 1822 leaders  as  possible.

 The  second,  fifth,  and  sixth  words  are identical in the two

 leaders, and all  of  the  existing  functionality  of  the  1822

 leaders  has  been  retained.   In  the  first word, the 1822 New

 Format Flag is now also used to identify the two types  of  1822L

 leaders, and the Handling Type has been moved to the second byte.

 The third and fourth words contain  the  Source  and  Destination

 1822L Name, respectively.

                              - 25 -


 1822L Host Access Protocol                          December 1983
 RFC 878

 3.1  Host-to-IMP 1822L Leader Format

                1      4 5      8 9             16
               +--------+--------+----------------+
               |        |  1822L |                |
               | Unused |  H2I   | Handling Type  |
               |        |  Flag  |                |
               +--------+--------+----------------+
                17    20 21 22 24 25            32
               +--------+-+------+----------------+
               |        |T|Leader|                |
               | Unused |R|Flags |  Message Type  |
               |        |C|      |                |
               +--------+-+------+----------------+
                33                              48
               +----------------------------------+
               |                                  |
               |           Source Host            |
               |                                  |
               +----------------------------------+
                49                              64
               +----------------------------------+
               |                                  |
               |         Destination Host         |
               |                                  |
               +----------------------------------+
                65                     76 77    80
               +-------------------------+--------+
               |                         |        |
               |       Message ID        |Sub-type|
               |                         |        |
               +-------------------------+--------+
                81                              96
               +----------------------------------+
               |                                  |
               |              Unused              |
               |                                  |
               +----------------------------------+

                  Host-to-IMP 1822L Leader Format
                            Figure 3.1

                              - 26 -


 1822L Host Access Protocol                          December 1983
 RFC 878

 Bits 1-4: Unused, must be set to zero.

 Bits 5-8: 1822L Host-to-IMP Flag:

      This field is set to decimal 13 (1101 in binary).

 Bits 9-16: Handling Type:

      This  field  is  bit-coded  to  indicate  the   transmission

      characteristics  of  the connection desired by the host. See

      1822(3.3).

      Bit 9: Priority Bit:

           Messages with this bit on will be treated  as  priority

           messages.

      Bits 10-16: Unused, must be zero.

 Bits 17-20: Unused, must be zero.

 Bit 21: Trace Bit:

      If equal to one, this message is designated for  tracing  as

      it proceeds through the network.  See 1822(5.5).

 Bits 22-24: Leader Flags:

      Bit 22: A flag available for use by  the  destination  host.

           See 1822(3.3) for a description of its use by the IMP's

           TTY Fake Host.

      Bits 23-24: Reserved for future use, must be zero.

                              - 27 -


 1822L Host Access Protocol                          December 1983
 RFC 878

 Bits 25-32: Message Type:

      Type 0: Regular Message  -  All  host-to-host  communication

           occurs  via  regular  messages, which have several sub-

           types, found in bits 77-80.  These sub-types are:

           0: Standard - The IMP uses its full message  and  error

                control facilities, and host blocking may occur.

           3: Uncontrolled  Packet  -  The  IMP  will  perform  no

                message-control   functions   for   this  type  of

                message, and network flow and  congestion  control

                may  cause loss of the packet.  Also see 1822(3.6)

                and section 2.3.

           1-2,4-15: Unassigned.

      Type 1: Error Without Message ID - See 1822(3.3).

      Type 2: Host Going Down - see 1822(3.3).

      Type 3: Name Declaration Message (NDM)  -  This  message  is

           used by the host to declare which of its 1822L names is

           or is not effective (see section 2.2.1), or to make all

           of  its  names non-effective.  The first 16 bits of the

           data portion of the NDM message, following  the  leader

           and  any  leader  padding, contains the number of 1822L

           names contained in the message.  This  is  followed  by

           the 1822L name entries, each 32 bits long, of which the

           first 16 bits is a 1822L name and the  second  16  bits

           contains  either  of  the  integers  zero or one.  Zero

                              - 28 -


 1822L Host Access Protocol                          December 1983
 RFC 878

           indicates that the name should not  be  effective,  and

           one  indicates  that the name should be effective.  The

           IMP will reply with a NDM Reply  message  (see  section

           3.2)  indicating  which  of the names are now effective

           and which are not.  Pictorially, a NDM message has  the

           following   format  (including  the  leader,  which  is

           printed  in  hexadecimal,  and   without   any   leader

           padding):

                              - 29 -


 1822L Host Access Protocol                          December 1983
 RFC 878

             1             16 17            32 33            48
            +----------------+----------------+----------------+
            |                |                |                |
            |      0D00      |      0003      |      0000      |
            |                |                |                |
            +----------------+----------------+----------------+
             49            64 65            80 81            96
            +----------------+----------------+----------------+
            |                |                |                |
            |      0000      |      0000      |      0000      |
            |                |                |                |
            +----------------+----------------+----------------+
             97           112 113          128 129          144
            +----------------+----------------+----------------+
            |                |                |                |
            |  # of entries  |  1822L name #1 |     0 or 1     |
            |                |                |                |
            +----------------+----------------+----------------+
            145           160 161          176
            +----------------+----------------+
            |                |                |
            |  1822L name #2 |     0 or 1     |       etc.
            |                |                |
            +----------------+----------------+

                        NDM Message Format
                            Figure 3.2

           An  NDM  with  zero  entries  will  cause  all  current

           effective names for the host to become non-effective.

      Type 4: NOP - This allows the IMP to  know  which  style  of

           leader  the  host wishes to use.  A 1822L NOP signifies

           that the host wishes to use 1822L leaders, and an  1822

           NOP signifies that the host wishes to use 1822 leaders.

           All of the other remarks concerning the NOP message  in

                              - 30 -


 1822L Host Access Protocol                          December 1983
 RFC 878

           1822(3.3)  still  hold.   The  host should always issue

           NOPs in groups of three to insure proper  reception  by

           the IMP.  Also see section 2.4 for a further discussion

           on the use of the NOP message.

      Type 8: Error with Message ID - see 1822(3.3).

      Type 11: Name Server Request - This allows the host  to  use

           the  IMP's  logical addressing tables as a name server.

           The destination name in the 1822L leader is translated,

           and  the  IMP replies with a Name Server Reply message,

           which lists the physical host addresses  to  which  the

           destination name maps.

      Type 12: Port List Request - This allows the  physical  host

           to  request the list of names that map to the host port

           over which this request was received by the  IMP.   The

           IMP replies with a Port List Reply message, which lists

           the names that map to the port.

      Types 5-7,9-10,13-255: Unassigned.

 Bits 33-48: Source Host:

      This field contains one of the  source  host's  1822L  names

      (or,  alternatively,  the 1822L address of the host port the

      message  is  being  sent   over).    This   field   is   not

      automatically filled in by the IMP, as in the 1822 protocol,

      because the host may be known by several names and may  wish

                              - 31 -


 1822L Host Access Protocol                          December 1983
 RFC 878

      to use a particular name as the source of this message.  All

      messages from the same host need not use the  same  name  in

      this  field.   Each  source  name, when used, is checked for

      authorization, effectiveness, and actually belonging to this

      host.  Messages using names that do not satisfy all of these

      requirements will not be delivered, and will instead  result

      in  an  error  message being sent back into the source host.

      If the host places its 1822L  address  in  this  field,  the

      address is checked to insure that it actually represents the

      host port where the message originated.

 Bits 49-64: Destination Host:

      This field  contains  the  1822L  name  or  address  of  the

      destination  host.   If it contains a name, the name will be

      checked for effectiveness, with an error message returned to

      the source host if the name is not effective.

 Bits 65-76: Message ID:

      This is a host-specified identification used in all  type  0

      and  type  8  messages, and is also used in type 2 messages.

      When used in type 0 messages, bits 65-72 are also  known  as

      the  Link  Field,  and  should  contain  values specified in

      Assigned  Numbers  [3]  appropriate  for  the   host-to-host

      protocol being used.

                              - 32 -


 1822L Host Access Protocol                          December 1983
 RFC 878

 Bits 77-80: Sub-type:

      This field is used as a modifier by message types 0,  2,  4,

      and 8.

 Bits 81-96: Unused, must be zero.

                              - 33 -


 1822L Host Access Protocol                          December 1983
 RFC 878

 3.2  IMP-to-Host 1822L Leader Format

                1      4 5      8 9             16
               +--------+--------+----------------+
               |        |  1822L |                |
               | Unused |  I2H   | Handling Type  |
               |        |  Flag  |                |
               +--------+--------+----------------+
                17    20 21 22 24 25            32
               +--------+-+------+----------------+
               |        |T|Leader|                |
               | Unused |R|Flags |  Message Type  |
               |        |C|      |                |
               +--------+-+------+----------------+
                33                              48
               +----------------------------------+
               |                                  |
               |           Source Host            |
               |                                  |
               +----------------------------------+
                49                              64
               +----------------------------------+
               |                                  |
               |         Destination Host         |
               |                                  |
               +----------------------------------+
                65                     76 77    80
               +-------------------------+--------+
               |                         |        |
               |       Message ID        |Sub-type|
               |                         |        |
               +-------------------------+--------+
                81                              96
               +----------------------------------+
               |                                  |
               |          Message Length          |
               |                                  |
               +----------------------------------+

                  IMP-to-Host 1822L Leader Format
                            Figure 3.3

                              - 34 -


 1822L Host Access Protocol                          December 1983
 RFC 878

 Bits 1-4: Unused and set to zero.

 Bits 5-8: 1822L IMP-to-Host Flag:

      This field is set to decimal 14 (1110 in binary).

 Bits 9-16: Handling Type:

      This has the value assigned by the source host (see  section

      3.1).   This field is only used in message types 0, 5-9, and

      15.

 Bits 17-20: Unused and set to zero.

 Bit 21: Trace Bit:

      If equal to one, the source host designated this message for

      tracing as it proceeds through the network.  See 1822(5.5).

 Bits 22-24: Leader Flags:

      Bit 22: Available as a destination host flag.

      Bits 23-24: Reserved for future use, set to zero.

 Bits 25-32: Message Type:

      Type 0: Regular Message  -  All  host-to-host  communication

           occurs  via  regular  messages, which have several sub-

           types.  The sub-type field (bits 77-80) is the same  as

           sent in the host-to-IMP leader (see section 3.1).

      Type 1: Error in Leader - See 1822(3.4).  In addition to its  |

           already  defined  sub-types,  this  message has two new  |

                              - 35 -


 1822L Host Access Protocol                          December 1983
 RFC 878

           sub-types:                                               |

           4: Illegal Leader Style - The host submitted  a  leader  |

                in  which  bits  5-8 did not contain the value 13,  |

                14, or 15 decimal.                                  |

           5: Wrong Leader Style - The  host  submitted  an  1822L  |

                leader  when the IMP was expecting an 1822 leader,  |

                or vice-versa.                                      |

      Type 2: IMP Going Down - See 1822(3.4).

      Type 3: NDM Reply - This is a reply to the  NDM  host-to-IMP

           message  (see  section  3.1).   It  will  have the same

           number of entries as the  NDM  message  that  is  being

           replying  to,  and  each  listed  1822L  name  will  be

           accompanied by a zero or a one  (see  figure  3.2).   A

           zero  signifies  that  the name is not effective, and a

           one means that the name is now effective.

      Type 4: NOP - The host should discard this message.   It  is

           used    during    initialization    of   the   IMP/host

           communication.  The Destination Host field will contain

           the  1822L  Address of the host port over which the NOP

           is being sent.  All other fields are unused.

      Type 5: Ready for Next Message (RFNM) - See 1822(3.4).

      Type 6: Dead Host Status - See 1822(3.4).

      Type 7: Destination Host or IMP  Dead  (or  unknown)  -  See

           1822(3.4).

                              - 36 -


 1822L Host Access Protocol                          December 1983
 RFC 878

      Type 8: Error in Data - See 1822(3.4).

      Type  9:  Incomplete  Transmission  -  See  1822(3.4).    In  |

           addition to its already defined sub-types, this message  |

           has one new sub-type:                                    |

           6: Logically Addressed Host Went  Down  -  A  logically  |

                addressed  message was lost in the network because  |

                the  destination  host  to  which  it  was   being  |

                delivered   went  down.   The  message  should  be  |

                resubmitted by the source host, since there may be  |

                another  effective  host port to which the message  |

                could be delivered (see section 2.2.3).             |

      Type 10: Interface Reset - See 1822(3.4).

      Type 11: Name Server Reply - This reply to the  Name  Server

           Request  host-to-IMP  message  contains,  following the

           leader  and  any  leader  padding,  a  word  with   the

           selection  policy  and the number of physical addresses

           to which the destination name  maps,  followed  by  two

           words  per physical address: the first word contains an

           1822L address, and  the  second  word  contains  a  bit

           signifying  whether  or not that particular translation

           is effective and the routing distance (expected network

           transmission  delay,  in 6.4 ms units) to the address's

           IMP.  In figure 3.4, which includes the leader  without

           any  leader  padding,  EFF is 1 for effective and 0 for

                              - 37 -


 1822L Host Access Protocol                          December 1983
 RFC 878

           non-effective, and POL is a two-bit  number  indicating

           the selection policy for the name (see section 2.2.2):

           0: First reachable.

           1: Closest physical address.

           2: Load leveling.

           3: Unused.

             1             16 17            32 33            48
            +----------------+----------------+----------------+
            |                |                |                |
            |      0E00      |      000B      |      0000      |
            |                |                |                |
            +----------------+----------------+----------------+
             49            64 65            80 81            96
            +----------------+----------------+----------------+
            |                |                |                |
            |   dest. name   |      0000      |      0000      |
            |                |                |                |
            +----------------+----------------+----------------+
             97           112 113          128 129          144
            +-+--------------+----------------+-+--------------+
            |P|              |                |E|              |
            |O|  # of addrs  |  1822L addr #1 |F| routing dist |
            |L|              |                |F|              |
            +-+--------------+----------------+-+--------------+
            145           160 161          176
            +----------------+-+--------------+
            |                |E|              |
            |  1822L addr #2 |F| routing dist |       etc.
            |                |F|              |
            +----------------+-+--------------+

                     Name Server Reply Format
                            Figure 3.4

                              - 38 -


 1822L Host Access Protocol                          December 1983
 RFC 878

      Type 12: Port List Reply - This is the  reply  to  the  Port

           List  Request  host-to-IMP  message.   It  contains the

           number of names that map to this  physical  host  port,

           followed by two words per name: the first word contains

           an 1822L name that maps to this port,  and  the  second

           contains  either a zero or a one, signifying whether or

           not that  particular  translation  is  effective.   The

           format  is  identical  to  the type 3 NDM Reply message

           (see figure 3.2).

      Type 15: 1822L Name or Address Error - This message is  sent

           in  response  to  a  type  0  message  from a host that

           contained an erroneous Source Host or Destination  Host

           field.  Its sub-types are:

           0: The Source Host 1822L name is not authorized or  not

                effective.

           1: The Source Host 1822L address  does  not  match  the

                host port used to send the message.

           2: The Destination Host 1822L name is not authorized.

           3:  The  physical  host  to  which  this   singly-homed

                Destination Host name translated is authorized and

                up, but not effective.  If the host  was  actually

                down,  a  type  7 message would be returned, not a

                type 15.

           5: The multi-homed Destination Host name is authorized,

                              - 39 -


 1822L Host Access Protocol                          December 1983
 RFC 878

                but has no available effective translations.

           6: A logically-addressed uncontrolled packet  was  sent

                to a dead or non-effective host port.  However, if

                it is resubmitted, there may be another  effective

                host  port to which the IMP may be able to attempt

                to send the packet.

           7: Logical addressing is not in use in this network.

           8-15: Unassigned.

      Types 4,13-14,16-255: Unassigned.

 Bits 33-48: Source Host:

      For type 0 messages, this field contains the 1822L  name  or

      address  of  the  host  that  originated  the  message.  All

      replies to the message should be sent to the host  specified

      herein.   For  message types 5-9 and 15, this field contains

      the source host field used in a previous type 0 message sent

      by this host.

 Bits 49-64: Destination Host:

      For type 0 messages, this field contains the 1822L  name  or

      address  that  the  message  was  sent  to.  This allows the

      destination host to detect  how  it  was  specified  by  the

      source  host.   For  message  types  5-9  and 15, this field

      contains the destination host field used in a previous  type

      0 message sent by this host.

                              - 40 -


 1822L Host Access Protocol                          December 1983
 RFC 878

 Bits 65-76: Message ID:

      For message types 0, 5, 7-9,  and  15,  this  is  the  value

      assigned  by  the  source  host to identify the message (see

      section 3.1).  This field is also used by  message  types  2

      and 6.

 Bits 77-80: Sub-type:

      This field is used as a modifier by message types 0-2,  5-7,

      9, and 15.

 Bits 81-96: Message Length:

      This field is contained in type 0, 3, 11,  and  12  messages

      only,  and  is  the  actual  length  in  bits of the message

      (exclusive of leader, leader padding, and hardware  padding)

      as computed by the IMP.

                              - 41 -


 1822L Host Access Protocol                          December 1983
 RFC 878

 4  REFERENCES

 [1]  "Specifications for the Interconnection of  a  Host  and  an

      IMP", BBN Report 1822, December 1981 Revision.

 [2]  E.  C.   Rosen   et.   al.,   "ARPANET   Routing   Algorithm

      Improvements",   Internet   Experimenter's  Note  183  (also

      published as BBN Report 4473, Vol. 1), August 1980, pp.  55-

      107.

 [3]  J. Reynolds and J. Postel, "Assigned Numbers",  Request  For

      Comments 870, October 1983, p. 14.

 [4]  J. Postel, ed., "Internet Protocol - DARPA Internet  Program

      Protocol Specification", Request for Comments 791, September

      1981.

 [5]  J. Postel, "Address Mappings",  Request  for  Comments  796,

      September 1981.

                              - 42 -


 1822L Host Access Protocol                          December 1983
 RFC 878

                            APPENDIX A

                     1822L-IP ADDRESS MAPPINGS

 Once logical addressing is in active  (or  universal)  use  in  a  |

 network,  to  the extent that the "official" host tables for that  |

 network specify hosts by their logical names rather than by their  |

 physical  network  addresses,  it would be desirable for hosts on  |

 other networks to also be able to use the same logical  names  to  |

 specify these hosts when sending traffic to them via the internet  |

 [4].                                                               |

 Happily, there exists a natural mapping between logical names and  |

 internet  addresses  that  fits  very  nicely  with  the  already  |

 standard ARPANET-style address mapping as specified in  RFC  796,  |

 Address  Mappings [5].  The current ARPANET-style class A mapping  |

 is as follows (from RFC 796):                                      |

                              - 43 -


 1822L Host Access Protocol                          December 1983
 RFC 878

         +--------+ +--------+--------+
         |  HOST  | |  ZERO  |  IMP   |    1822 Address
         +--------+ +--------+--------+
             8          8        8

         +--------+--------+--------+--------+
         | net #  |  HOST  |   LH   |  IMP   |   IP Address
         +--------+--------+--------+--------+
             8        8        8        8

                       1822 Class A Mapping
                            Figure A.1

 For 1822L names and addresses, the mapping would be:               |

         +--------+--------+
         | upper  | lower  |     1822L Name or Address
         +--------+--------+
             8        8

         +--------+--------+--------+--------+
         | net #  | upper  |   LH   | lower  |   IP Address
         +--------+--------+--------+--------+
             8        8        8        8

                       1822L Class A Mapping
                            Figure A.2

 For 1822L addresses,  this  mapping  is  identical  to  the  1822  |

 mapping.   For  1822L  names,  the  IP address would appear to be  |

 addressing a high-numbered (64-255) 1822 host.  Although  the  LH  |

 (logical  host)  field  is still defined, its use is discouraged;  |

 multiple logical names should now be used to  multiplex  multiple  |

                              - 44 -


 1822L Host Access Protocol                          December 1983
 RFC 878

 functions onto one physical host port.                             |

 This mapping extends to class B networks:                          |

         +--------+--------+
         | upper  | lower  |     1822L Name or Address
         +--------+--------+
             8        8

         +----------------+--------+--------+
         | network number | upper  | lower  |   IP Address
         +----------------+--------+--------+
                 16            8        8

                       1822L Class B Mapping
                            Figure A.3

 Finally, logical addressing will allow IMP-based class C networks  |

 for  the  first  time.   Previously,  it  was very hard to try to  |

 divide the 8 bits of host specification into some number of  host  |

 bits  and  some  number  of  IMP  bits.   However,  if ALL of the  |

 internet-accessible hosts on  the  network  have  logical  names,  |

 there is no reason why networks with up to 256 such logical names  |

 cannot now use class C addresses, as follows:                      |

                              - 45 -


 1822L Host Access Protocol                          December 1983
 RFC 878

         +--------+--------+
         |01000000| lower  |     1822L Name
         +--------+--------+
             8        8

         +------------------------+--------+
         |     network number     | lower  |   IP Address
         +------------------------+--------+
                     24                8

                       1822L Class C Mapping
                            Figure A.4

 Those hosts on the network  desiring  internet  access  would  be  |

 assigned  logical  names in the range 40000 to 40377 (octal), and  |

 the  gateway(s)  connected  to  that  network  would   make   the  |

 translation  from IP addresses to 1822L names as specified above.  |

 Note that the network could have many more than 256 hosts, or 256  |

 defined  names;  the  only  restriction is that hosts that desire  |

 internet support or access be addressable by a name in the  range  |

 40000  -  40377.   Traffic that was strictly local to the network  |

 could use other names or even 1822L addresses.                     |

                              - 46 -


 1822L Host Access Protocol                          December 1983
 RFC 878

                               INDEX

 1822...................................................... 3
 1822 address.............................................. 5
 1822 host................................................. 4
 1822L..................................................... 3
 1822L address............................................. 6
 1822L and 1822 interoperability.......................... 15
 1822L host................................................ 4
 1822L name................................................ 5
 address selection policy................................. 12
 authorized................................................ 8
 blocking................................................. 20
 closest physical address................................. 12
 connection............................................... 20
 destination host..................................... 32, 40
 effective............................................. 9, 23
 first reachable.......................................... 12
 handing type......................................... 27, 35
 host downs............................................... 13
 interoperability......................................... 15
 leader flags......................................... 27, 35
 link field............................................... 32
 load leveling............................................ 12
 logical addressing........................................ 3
 message ID........................................... 32, 41
 message length........................................... 41
 message type......................................... 28, 35
 multi-homing.............................................. 3
 name server...................................... 23, 31, 37
 NDM................................................... 9, 28
 NDM reply............................................. 9, 36
 NOC....................................................... 8
 NOP........................................... 4, 19, 30, 36
 priority bit............................................. 27
 regular message...................................... 28, 35
 RFNM................................................. 20, 36
 source host.......................................... 31, 40
 standard message......................................... 28
 sub-type............................................. 33, 41
 symmetric................................................. 4
 trace bit............................................ 27, 35

                              - 47 -


 1822L Host Access Protocol                          December 1983
 RFC 878

 uncontrolled packet.................................. 16, 28
 virtual circuit connection............................... 20

                              - 48 -